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FSP at 2025 Computex: Air and Liquid CPU Coolers, Specialist PSUs, and Cases

btarunr

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System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 16GB DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX
Storage Samsung 990 1TB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
FSP, the channel brand of power supply giant Fortron, brought a large lineup of their latest gaming PC power supplies, cooling products, and PC cases to Computex 2025. We begin our tour with the things FSP specializes in—power supplies. The Cannon Pro 2500 W is a titan, which maxes out your 16 A wall socket for 2.5 kW of continuous power delivery, with excursions within the ATX 3.1 and PCIe 5.1 specs. The PSU offers Cybenetics Platinum and 80 Plus Platinum switching efficiency. Putting the 2.5 kW output to use are four (!) 600 W-capable 12V-2x6 power connectors, making this PSU fit for AI acceleration builds.

A notch below the Cannon Pro 2500 W is the Mega Ti series, which comes in high-wattage variants of 1650 W, 1350 W, and 1000 W. This is considered FSP's flagship power product, because of its Cybenetics Titanium and 80 Plus Titanium switching efficiency. Both the 1650 W and 1350 W models offer two 12V-2x6 connectors, while the 1000 W model offers one of these. The PSUs offer fanless cooling up to a fairly high load factor. The Mega PM series is positioned a notch below the Mega Ti series in FSP's product stack. As the name suggests, these offer 80 Plus Platinum and Cybenetics Platinum certified efficiency. These only come in 1650 W and 1350 W variants, both of which offer two 12V-2x6 connectors.



The Mega GM series is positioned a notch further below the Mega PM and Mega Ti series. As its name might suggest, these are upper mid-range PSUs offering 80 Plus Gold switching efficiency, and come in capacities of 1200 W, 1000 W, and 850 W. All three models offer a single 12V-2x6 power connector. The Vita series is positioned below the Mega PM series, and comes in a low-depth body that uses a 120 mm fan instead of the 135 mm spinner in the Mega series. The Vita PM series offers 80 Plus Platinum efficiency, and comes in 1000 W, 850 W, 750 W, and 650 W variants. The 1000 W and 850 W variants offer 600 W-capable 12V-2x6; the 750 W and 650 W variants offer 450 W-capable 12V-2x6.



The Advan BD+ series is updated from the 2024 Advan BD series to support the newer ATX 3.1 and PCIe 5.1 specs. These mainstream PSUs offer 80 Plus Bronze efficiency, and come in wattages of 850 W, 750 W, 650 W, 550 W, 450 W, and 350 W. The 850 W model offers a 600 W 12V2x6, the 750 W and 650 W ones offer a 450 W 12V-2x6, while the 550 W or lower models lack 12V-2x6. Lastly, there's the Dagger PM line of SFX power supplies, which come in 850 W and 1000 W capacities, both with a 600 W-capable 12V-2x6, and the latest ATX 3.1/PCIe 5.1 standards, besides 80 Plus Platinum switching efficiency.

At Computex 2025, FSP brought three case models, the U660, the U580, and the M570. The U660 targets workstations, particularly AI workstations with four or more graphics cards. It offers 9 expansion slots for XL-ATX motherboards, and support for multiple 360 mm radiators. FSP brands this as an "ATX Ultra tower." The case measures 451 mm x 258 mm x 568 mm. It supports BTF backside cabling. There are as many as 18 detachable 3.5-inch drive bays. Cooling includes two 360 mm radiator provisions, and as many as 8 140 mm or 120 mm fan mounts.



The M570 is FSP's gamer focused ATX mid-tower, which comes in black and white color variants, with a conventional horizontally partitioned layout, with a few contemporary features, such as BTF cabling, 2nd Gen ARGB, type-C ports, room for graphics cards up to 42 cm in length, and an LED segment display for temperature. We were shown a white variant with a mesh intake on the front, and a black variant with a Swedish-style wood front intake. The U580 is another interesting ATX "ultra tower," but with a cubical shape with a left corner panel that you can mount a display on, HYTE-style. There are 9 expansion slots, BTF motherboard support, and room for multiple 360 mm or 240 mm radiators.



Winding things up for us at the FSP booth were the company's cooling product lineup. The AP36 is a premium AIO CLC featuring a 2.8-inch true-color LCD that can be made to display just about anything. The cooler, as its name suggests, comes with a 360 mm radiator, with a trio of high-end 30 mm-thick case fans. The AD36 and AD24 are the company's mid-range AIO. These come with an LED segment display that puts out CPU temperature pulled form ACPI, and a simpler set of ARGB LED fans.

The air cooler lineup is led by the MP9-B series, a massive dual fin-stack (D-type) cooler with a pair of 140 mm fans in push-pull config, six 6 mm-thick copper heat pipes, and an offset stack design that maximizes memory clearance. The cooler is 165 mm-tall, and you need to check with your case's specs sheet if you can fit one in. The MP7P-B is positioned a notch below the MP9-B. This too is a dual fin-stack cooler, but with a reduced height of 158 mm that's more compatible with today's mid-towers. The heatsink is very similar, but the digital top-plate makes way for thinner die-cast aluminium plates for the height reduction. Lastly, there's the ND5-B, a single-tower air cooler that uses four 6 mm heat pipes, and a single 120 mm fan. This cooler offers a digital segment display on top.

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I don't see the point of using an IEC C19 socket... Are people actually going to install 20A sockets just to use their PC?
 
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